Assessing models of force-dependent unbinding rates via infrequent metadynamics
Willmor J. Pe\~na Ccoa, Glen M. Hocky

TL;DR
This study evaluates the effectiveness of infrequent metadynamics in predicting force-dependent unbinding rates of protein-ligand interactions, demonstrating success with simple models and challenges with complex systems like biotin-streptavidin.
Contribution
It shows that infrequent metadynamics can accurately reproduce slip and catch bond kinetics in simple models and highlights current limitations with complex biological systems.
Findings
Successfully reproduces slip and catch bond kinetics in model potentials
Predicts slip bond behavior for biotin-streptavidin at larger forces
Identifies methodological challenges with complex unbinding pathways
Abstract
Protein-ligand interactions are crucial for a wide range of physiological processes. Many cellular functions result in these non-covalent `bonds' being mechanically strained, and this can be integral to proper cellular function. Broadly, two classes of force dependence have been observed -- slip bonds, where unbinding rate increases, and catch bonds where unbinding rate decreases. Despite much theoretical work, we cannot we predict for which protein-ligand pairs, pulling coordinates, and forces a particular rate dependence will appear. Here, we assess the ability of MD simulations combined with enhanced sampling techniques to probe the force dependence of unbinding rates. We show that the infrequent metadynamics technique correctly produces both catch and slip bonding kinetics for model potentials. We then apply it to the well-studied case of a buckyball in a hydrophobic cavity, which…
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